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. 1989;42(12):1171-8.
doi: 10.1016/0895-4356(89)90115-7.

Recurrence of low birth weight in siblings

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Recurrence of low birth weight in siblings

M J Khoury et al. J Clin Epidemiol. 1989.

Abstract

The recurrence of low birth weight (LBW, less than 2500 g) in full siblings was studied in 3286 singleton infants born between 1966 and 1986 to 1677 male U.S. Army veterans who were part of a nationwide health study. Hospital of birth medical records were abstracted for these children. Mean birth weights, risks of LBW, LBW occurring with preterm delivery (less than 37 weeks) (LBW/p), and LBW in term infants (LBW/t) were examined in successive singleton siblings according to LBW status of prior siblings. The risk of LBW in infants who had prior siblings with LBW was 9.9%, compared with a risk of 2.8% in infants who had prior siblings without LBW (OR = 3.8, 95% CI 2.0-7.3). The excess recurrence of LBW was specifically due to LBW/p. Infants with prior siblings with LBW/p were at high tisk of LBW/p (OR = 9.2, CI 4.4-19.6) but not of LBW/t (OR = 2.0, CI 0.1-9.1). Using modified logistic regression techniques that incorporate familial risks and the effects of other risk factors, the excess sibling recurrence risk of LBW and LBW/p could not be explained by the tendency for recurrence in siblings of other risk factors for LBW, such as pregnancy complications, maternal illnesses, and birth defects. Although the familial factors involved in LBW may or may not be genetic in nature, such factors need to be investigated in epidemiologic studies of LBW and prematurity.

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